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Authors: Jeff Miller

BOOK: The Bubble Gum Thief
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After dinner, they checked into the Marriott. Dagny showered, then tossed on a robe and climbed into the bed with her computer. Lieutenant Beamer had sent her an e-mail with the scan from the sketch artist attached. It looked like George Clooney.

An invitation to video chat flashed on her screen, and Dagny accepted. She caught the Professor up on their interview with Waxton and his identification of a man who looked like George Clooney.

“Gerry Cooney?”

“No, George Clooney.”

“I don’t know who that is. My source in the lab was finally able to get me results from the prints.”

“From the copy of
In Cold Blood
?”

“Yes. They’re a match.”

“Who?”

“The prints belong to an agent.”

“You mean one of Fabee’s idiots touched the book before I got to it?”

“No. A retired agent. Jim Murgentroy,” he replied. “Pack your bags. You’re going to Nashville.”

CHAPTER 34

April 9—Nashville, Tennessee

From a distance, Jim Murgentroy’s home in the Nashville hills appeared to be crumbling, less a dwelling than a small barn or shack sheltering a moonshine still. Largely obscured behind overgrown trees and shrubbery, its weathered plank walls were irregular and crooked. The whole thing looked as if it would topple in a light breeze.

Two large dark sedans belonging to the Bureau—Bucars—were parked in the gravel drive in front of the house. Dagny parked next to them and Victor knocked on the door.

Fabee answered. “I figured.”

She was surprised when he let them in.

Despite the ramshackle exterior, the inside of the house was rich and refined, open and airy. Shined blond hardwood floors, red interlocking molding around the ceilings and doorways, Japanese fusuma sliding doors made of bamboo and rice paper. And books. Thousands of books, filling the built-in shelves that lined nearly every wall of the house, even in the bathroom and kitchen. Murgentroy was in the living room, slumped on a plush
purple couch. Three male agents stood over him. Fabee motioned for Dagny and Victor to join them.

Jim Murgentroy was drinking a glass of wine, and from the way he was spilling it, she guessed it wasn’t his first. He looked about fifty. The wrinkles on his face cut deep. Murgentroy’s eyebrows were thick and bushy. He hadn’t shaved in a few days, and his hair hung down to his collar in the back. Despite his disheveled appearance, he was a tall, strapping man, and Dagny could see the former agent in him.

Two of the agents with Fabee looked familiar to Dagny. One was tall and thin, the other was tall and fat. Maybe she’d seen them among the Fabulous in Salt Lake, huddled in front of the Silverses’ house. The third agent was bald, short, and stocky. He had a thin mustache, wore a tan overcoat, and waved a lit cigar in his hand. He spoke with a high, squeaky voice. “Jimmie, we’re just asking for you to help us out. No one thinks you did it.” The agent raised his cigar to his mouth and puffed smoke toward Murgentroy, then reached into his inside pocket and found another cigar. He rolled it between his fingers—a neat trick—and then extended it in Murgentroy’s direction.

Murgentroy shook his head. “I don’t smoke them anymore, Jack.”

“There ain’t much left in life if you can’t enjoy a nice cigar every now and then.” Jack held it in front of Murgentroy for a few seconds, but Murgentroy didn’t bite. Jack put the cigar back inside his coat pocket.

“The smoke messes up the wood,” Murgentroy said, slurring his words.

“Nah,” Jack said, walking toward the bookshelves along the back wall. He ran his index finger along the spines of the books. “Nice collection, by the way,” Jack said, punctuating it with a ring of smoke.

Murgentroy laughed, then grabbed his glass, splashing more wine onto the table. “I told you the book was mine, jackass.”

“But that’s not what we’re asking.”

“If the Bureau didn’t want me, why should I want to help it?”

Jack blew a big puff of smoke. “Because you don’t want to go to jail.”

Murgentroy jumped up from the couch and hurled his glass over Jack’s shoulder; it exploded against the bookshelves. Dagny jumped to avoid the flying shards. One landed on Victor’s arm and he brushed it off. No one said anything. Jack kept puffing on his cigar. Murgentroy sat back down on the edge of the couch and buried his face in his hands. Fabee and the other two agents stood perfectly still.

Finally, Jack walked around the coffee table and sat on the couch next to Murgentroy. He reached into his pocket, retrieved the cigar, and offered it again. Hand trembling, Murgentroy grabbed the cigar and placed it in his mouth. Jack pulled a lighter from his pocket and lit the cigar for him. After a few puffs, Murgentroy seemed to calm.

“Now look, Jimmie. Someone wants us to think you killed a family in Salt Lake City. We have a plane ticket in your name from Nashville to Salt Lake before the crime, and one after the crime coming back. Plus, we’ve got you on a flight from Cincinnati to DC right after the bank robbery and before the murder in Georgetown. Now me? I don’t think you did it. But the appearance of the whole thing...Plus, you live like a hermit. Nobody’s seen you in months. Now, I know it’s not you. But I need to know how someone got
that
book with
your
prints from
your
shelf. If I get that, then maybe I can find how he flew under your name. But I need to know about the book.”

Murgentroy rolled the cigar from one side of his mouth to the other—another neat trick, Dagny thought—then reached toward the table for his wineglass and laughed when it wasn’t there. “In the last year, I’ve read probably five hundred books. I’m reading two a day. Three sometimes, if I’m not sleeping.
I had seven copies of
In Cold Blood
, each a different edition, including a pristine first printing. I don’t know who took the seventh copy, but I’m damn glad he left me the first. As for who could have taken it, I can’t help you there, but I wouldn’t be inclined to even if I knew.” Murgentroy looked up at Dagny and Victor, tilted his head and squinted a little. “I don’t know you two, but I’m Jim Murgentroy. You can call me Jimmie. I used to be one of you.”

Dagny nodded at the former agent. He smiled back. She wondered what awful thing had led him to retreat to a world of expensive books and cheap wine.

Fabee tapped Jack on his shoulder, then took his place on the couch. “I’m on your side, Jimmie. But how can I clear you if you won’t help me?”

“Do what agents do, Justin. Watch me.”

The six of them gathered on Murgentroy’s gravel driveway. The tall, skinny agent stood on Fabee’s right; the tall, fat one on his left. Jack paced back and forth, puffing on his cigar. Victor and Dagny leaned against Fabee’s car, which seemed to bother him, so Dagny leaned back more.

Fabee folded his arms and stared back at Murgentroy’s house, shaking his head. “Bones and Chunky will take midnight to eight. Dagny and Victor have eight to four.”

“On what?” Dagny asked.

“Surveillance,” Fabee said.

“We’re going to watch him twenty-four seven?”

“Through the fifteenth. See what happens.”

Fabee was effectively pulling them from the case again. “You’ve got a hundred men on this case! You don’t need to stick us here.”

“It’s my case, Dagny. You should be glad I’m putting you at the center of it.”

“He’s not the guy. You know that.”

Fabee walked up to Dagny and leaned in close. “Jack and I are taking four to midnight until I get a couple more goons down here. If I’m not too good for this, you sure as fuck aren’t. Christ, I gave you the day shift, you ungrateful bitch!”

“You shouldn’t be out here either!”

Fabee stepped back. The red drained from his face, and he smiled. He flashed between crazed and congenial a little too quickly for Dagny’s taste. “He’s a real suspect. He doesn’t have an alibi, and his prints were at the scene. And we’ve got him flying to Salt Lake City and DC.”

“No, you don’t,” she said. “You’ve just got tickets in his name. Our man isn’t dumb enough to leave a book with his prints at a murder scene, sticking out from the shelves, begging us to find it. And the wrinkles on his face? Melissa Ryder would have noticed something like that.” Plus, nobody could mistake that man for George Clooney, Dagny thought. Not even a senile old coot like Waxton.

“Your shift is on,” Fabee said, forestalling negotiation. He ducked into his sedan and emerged with a walkie-talkie. He tossed it to Victor. “Bones has another one,” he said.

Dagny walked over to the tall, skinny agent, but he shook his head. “I’m Chunky, he’s Bones,” he said, pointing to the tall, fat agent.

“You’re Chunky and he’s Bones?”

“That’s right.”

“I get it,” Dagny said. “What do you call Fabee? Handsome? Einstein?”

Bones handed Dagny a walkie-talkie. “We call him Boss, which is what you should call him, too.” Bones and Chucky climbed into their sedan and drove off. Fabee started to head to the other sedan, then stopped and turned back to Dagny.

“Bones used to be skinny and Chunky used to be fat. Then the one went on a diet and the other guy’s wife died and they kind of traded places. But we’d been calling them by their nicknames for so long...who’s gonna change it. As for me, I scored fifteen sixty on my SATs. And since you only managed a fourteen ninety, I don’t think you’re in a position to denigrate my intelligence.” Fabee and Jack walked over to their Bucar, climbed in, and drove away.

Standing next to Dagny, Victor pressed the transmit button on his walkie-talkie and his voice came from Dagny’s. “You
were
kind of a bitch,” his voice boomed, peppered with static. “I’ll camp in the woods behind the house.”

Dagny nodded, agreeing to both statements, and Victor ran to the back of the house. Dagny hopped onto the hood of the Impala and leaned against the windshield, staring up at the front porch. The drapes parted and Murgentroy waved, sipping another glass of wine. She knew that a lot of agents retired to lives of family and travel, but she worried that her path would end, like Murgentroy’s, with loneliness and solitude.

“Hey,” Victor called over the walkie-talkie. “I bought a sandwich for you at the airport. It’s in my bag in the car.”

“Thanks.” She’d had a bowl of Cheerios that morning, along with a banana and a glass of orange juice. It would be a few hours before she was hungry again.

“Are you going to get it?”

“Yes.” Maybe later.

The worst part of practicing law had been sitting on a folding chair in a windowless warehouse, sifting through thousands of documents, looking for something that didn’t exist. The worst part of the Bureau was sitting on the hood of a car, watching a house, waiting for something that wasn’t going to happen. Her eyes rolled left across the front of the house—
window, window, door, window, window, carport—and then back again—carport, window, window, door, window, window. Back and forth. Like a typewriter...
tap, tap, tap
, return. She listened to the breeze blowing through the leaves. A squirrel running across a branch. The hum of a car on the road down the hill. A plane flying overhead. Her own breath, in and out, in and out. All the while, her eyes moving...
tap, tap, tap
, return.

The fifteenth of April was only six days away.

Static, then Victor’s voice. “This is boring.”

Transmit. “The good news is that you can retire in twenty years with a pension.”

Another plane buzzed above. A dog barked in the distance, at first loud and ferocious, then just a sad whimper. She saw a flicker of light through one of Murgentroy’s windows—the flashing images of a television screen. A glance at her watch. Three more hours until the end of their shift. Three hours until she could—

Victor screamed.

Not an alert or a call for help. He screamed like someone who’d been hurt.

Dagny drew her gun from its holster and jumped from the hood of the car. She sprinted to the side of the house and ducked down behind the bushes. She started a slow, careful crawl toward the back corner, but the sound of two gunshots sent her into a dash. When she rounded the corner, she saw Victor lying on the ground fifty feet away, at the edge of the back woods. Murgentroy stood on the patio with his rifle raised in Victor’s direction. He didn’t see Dagny.

“Drop it!” Dagny yelled, aiming her gun at Murgentroy.

Murgentroy glanced over at Dagny but kept his rifle focused on the woods.

“Drop it!” Her finger curled against the trigger, ready to fire. Murgentroy wasn’t paying attention to her; he was just staring into the woods. “Drop it!” If there was any chance of saving
Victor, this negotiation had to come to a fast end. One more chance. “Drop it, or I’ll shoot!”

Without looking at Dagny, Murgentroy dropped the rifle—his arms fell to his sides, and he stumbled back. Then he reached up with his right hand and rubbed his left shoulder. His head dropped forward, as if he’d fallen asleep, and then his whole body collapsed to the ground.

Dagny ran over to Murgentroy and grabbed his rifle, then ran back to Victor. Twenty feet away, she didn’t see any blood. Ten, and he still looked fine, almost as if he were sleeping. She was five feet away when she felt a sharp sting pierce her chest, just below her right shoulder. For a second or two, she thought she would be able to carry on, but then she fell to the ground and everything went dark.

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